NEW GRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAM PROPOSAL:
Ph.D. and M.S. IN PSYCHOLOGY
Oregon State University
College of Liberal Arts
School of Psychological Science
CPS Tracking # 92189
September 2014
1. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
a. Proposed Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) Number: #42.2813
b. Program Overview: Brief overview (1-2 paragraphs) of the proposed program, including its disciplinary foundations and connections; program objectives, programmatic focus; degree, certificate, minor, and concentrations offered.
The School of Psychological Science (SPS) at Oregon State University (OSU) proposes to offer an M.S. and Ph.D. in Psychology degree program. The program’s general focus will be on applied psychology, defined as the application of psychological principles, theories, and methods to solving practical problems. The proposed graduate degree program will have three areas of concentration: (a) Engineering Psychology, (b) Health Psychology, and (c) Applied Cognition. Engineering Psychology refers to research at the intersection of psychology and technology. Relevant topics include such things as the improvement of technology, human-machine interfaces, transportation, information systems, and work and living environments (as in the Mission of Division 21 of the American Psychological Association). Health Psychology concerns the relations between psychological factors (e.g., cognition, motivation, individual and interpersonal behavior, emotion) and human wellness broadly defined (as in the mission of the APA Division 38). We define Applied Cognition as the application of research on thinking, learning, decision-making, perception, social judgment, and other cognitive processes to applied issues. Examples of relevant application areas include the psychology of teaching and learning, the effects of contemplative practice, and risk perception.
Graduates of the Psychology M.S., Ph.D. program will be qualified to define, assess, analyze and evaluate problems in both the private and public sector that are behavior based. In contrast to consultants and experts who rely on their common sense and intuition to design educational programs, work environments, management teams, information delivery systems, technology based tools, our graduates will be trained to apply the scientific method and use evidence-based information to address these and other issues. Additionally, all graduates will be equipped to train the next generation of teachers, researchers and practitioners in our concentration areas. To achieve this, the proposed program is designed to have a strong research component, ensuring that graduates have the tools to tackle a variety of applied problems. This entails both classwork in research methods and statistics but perhaps more importantly a continuing emphasis on student research. The program is intended to be a doctoral program with a masters degree component that is obtained en route to the Ph.D. That is, the program is designed to focus on Ph.D. students rather than terminal M.S. students, and do not intend to recruit or accept students whose goal is a terminal M.S. The M.S. portion of the program is designed to assure that students have experience designing and conducting research prior to the dissertation stage. This is in keeping with the goal of giving students a strong foundation in empirical research methods (see below).
c. Course of Study: Proposed curriculum, including course numbers, titles, and credit hours.
The proposed curriculum is designed to give students a strong foundation in empirical research methods relevant to the assessment and analysis of human behavior and performance as well as expertise in their particular content area. Students will work with a committee of up to five participants, which will include at a minimum a Major Advisor and two others who are members of the Graduate Faculty in Psychology, along with a Graduate Council Representative. Another committee member (e.g., Minor area advisor) may be drawn from outside the Graduate Faculty in Psychology if desired.
The Psychology Ph.D. Program requires a minimum of 111 credits, including at least 36 credits of dissertation. The program is organized into core requirements for all students, along with additional work in a concentration area composed of electives, the nature of which is defined primarily by the student’s research focus. The core requirements are in research methods, professional issues, and basic content in psychology. The required core curriculum provides a critical foundation in quantitative and research methods, core theory in Psychological Science, Ethics, and Professional Issues. In accord with OSU Graduate Council policy, no more than 15 credits of blanket numbered classes, excluding dissertation, thesis, or internship credit, may be used towards the 111 credit minimum. The course requirements and anticipated scheduling are displayed in Table 1 below.
Table 1: Psychology PhD Program Curriculum (* denotes new Cat II class proposal; a denotes class previously taught as 599 or graduate seminar)
Course(SCH) / Title / Notes / Total
SCH / Taught:
PSY 511 (4)
PSY 512 (4)
PSY 514 (4)
PSY 515 (4)
PSY 571 (4) / Methods Core
Quantitative Methods I*
Quantitative Methods II*
Research Methods I* a
Research Methods II*
Graduate Psychometrics* a / All Required / 20 / Annually
PSY 521 (1)
PSY 523 (1) / Professional Core
Issues in Professional Psychology*a
Ethics in Psychological Research* / All Required 1st year
3 terms X 1 cr / 4 / Annually
PSY 531 (4)
PSY 541 (4)
PSY 551 (4)
PSY 561 (4)
PSY 581 (4)
PSY 591 (4) / Basic Content Core
Behavioral Neuroscience* a
Cognition*
Psychological Development*
Social Psychology* a
Abnormal Psychology*
Health Psychology* / Students select 3 / 12 / Biennial
PSY 510
(1-6)
PSY 526 (4)
PSY 533 (4)
PSY 537 (4)
PSY 542 (4)
PSY 544 (4)
PSY 548 (4)
PSY 554 (4)
PSY 556 (4)
PSY 558 (4)
PSY 564 (4)
PSY 566 (4)
PSY 582 (4)
PSY 583 (4)
PSY 585 (4)
PSY 592 (4)
PSY 594 (4)
PSY 595 (4)
PSY 596 (4)
PSY 599 (4)
PSY 613 (4)
PSY 643 (4)
PSY 649 (4)
PSY 697 (4)
PSY 698 (4)
PSY 699 (4) / Concentration Electives
Field Experience in Human Services
Psychology of Gender
Psychopharmacology
Motivation
Perception
Learning and Memory
Consciousness
Cognitive Development
Social Development
Language Development
Social Cognition
Fat Studies
Psychotherapy
Developmental Psychopathology
Behavior Modification
Conservation Psychology
Engineering Psychology
Psychology of Meditation* a
Industrial/Organizational Psychology
Special Topics
Quantitative Methods III*
Applied Cognition*
Advanced Engineering Psychology*
Psychology of Teaching and Learning*
Health Psychology across the Lifespan* a
Special Topics* / Students select 6
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
slash class
Topics differ for each offering; sometimes slash, sometimes stand-alone graduate; repeatable
Topics differ for each offering; repeatable / 24 / Slash -
most at
least
yearly
Varies
New 600
levels -
biennial
Varies
PSY 501
(1-16)
PSY 503
(1-16) / Research
Thesis / 9
6
PSY 603
(1-16) / Dissertation* / 36
(min)
Psychology currently participates in the Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies (MAIS) program. In the MAIS program, students create an interdisciplinary focus by choosing one primary and two secondary areas from different degree programs on campus. There are currently ten students in the MAIS program who have declared psychology to be their primary area, which means that their advisor, the bulk of their coursework, and their main research focus is in psychology. The MAIS is designed to be flexible and has little by way of formal curriculum. However, we attempt to train our primary MAIS students intensively in psychological methods and theory. Because of this, we already teach a relatively small number of stand-alone graduate courses in order for our students to be appropriately trained and so that they can have enough stand-alone graduate class credits to graduate per OSU rules. Because the School of Psychological Science (SPS) does not control the MAIS curriculum, we teach these classes either as special topics (PSY 599) or seminar classes. One of these classes, which is taught every term as a seminar (PSY 507), is Issues in Professional Psychology (aka “prosem”). This course (which we will give its own permanent course number), along with a course in research ethics, constitutes the proposed PhD program’s Professional Core. PhD Students will take 1 credit of prosem each term during their first year. This class is designed for discussion of issues related to applied psychology and the psychology research enterprise, including topics such as, the teaching of psychology in university settings, presentations to professional audiences, grant application process, job market preparation, using psychology to inform policy, journal reviewing, current methodological controversies, etc.
Concentration area electives are designed to give the student the specific background needed to pursue his or her particular area of interest. SPS already offers a number of slash courses that will be available (see Table 1); however, only a maximum of three slash courses will count towards this degree. Several new stand-alone graduate courses of particular relevance to the PhD program focus, noted in Table 1, will be added to the curriculum via the Cat II process. Among these will be a class on the Psychology of Teaching and Learning (PSY 697) which, in addition to serving potential research interests, will also contribute to students’ ability to design classes and teach. In addition, a variety of stand-alone graduate special topic classes (PSY 599) are currently offered as part of our involvement in the MAIS program. We currently offer at least one 599 class per year. Stand-alone 599 classes will continue to be offered, as they allow for in-depth examination of topics of relevance to various students’ interests. Topics in the past have included Intelligence, Uncertainty, Health Psychology across the Lifespan, Issues in Neuroscience, Face-to-Face Interaction Processes, as well as research methods courses. Some of these are of central relevance to the focus of the new PhD and will go through the Cat II process to become a permanent part of the curriculum (noted in Table 1). In addition, students’ committees will have the leeway to approve graduate classes from outside of SPS as counting towards the Concentration Electives requirements, if such classes are relevant to the student’s focus.
As part of the Ph.D. program, students will obtain an M.S. This will be done using the “thesis option” as outlined by the OSU Graduate School. Students will conduct original research under the supervision of his or her advisor, submit a written thesis to their committee, and orally defend the thesis. The M.S. process is intended to give students experience with leading the design and conduct of empirical research prior to the dissertation stage of the degree. The M.S. degree will require a minimum of 45 graduate credits including thesis credits. As with the Ph.D., a maximum of three slash classes will count towards the M.S. degree.
In addition to the course requirements described in Table 1, students will be required to pass degree milestones every year. The Ph.D. program is designed to be research intensive, such that students gain a great deal of hands-on experience in conducting research. This is reflected in the milestones.
1) In the first year, students must:
a. Have a program of study meeting with their committee
b. Present a prospectus of their 2nd year Master’s thesis project to their committee. This project will require an empirical research study that is designed, conducted, and analyzed by the student under the supervision of his or her advisor. The prospectus can be in the form of a presentation at the program of study meeting, or can be a short, three page document of the form of the Proposed Plan of Research used in the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship application.
c. Write a short report of a research project and complete a research presentation at a departmental colloquium. This report and presentation is based on research the student engaged in during the first year that is either independent (but under the supervision of the advisor) or part of a larger project (i.e., part of ongoing work in one of the SPS labs). As part of their educational and professional development, all students will be part of one or more of the many research labs within SPS from their first term until they graduate, as is typically the case in experimental psychology programs.
2) At the end of the second year, students must submit a written Master’s thesis and orally defend it. As per Oregon State University requirements, students must have had a minimum of 45 graduate credits including thesis in order to be awarded an M.S. degree.
3) By the end of their third year, students must
a. Pass their preliminary exams. This exam will test mastery of core theories in Psychology as well as advanced theory and knowledge in the student’s research area. It will be composed of a written comprehensive exam that, if passed and if formal coursework is completed, will be followed by an oral preliminary exam. This exam will provide an additional, follow-up assessment of the material relevant to the written exam.
b. Write and defend a dissertation proposal, which, if successful, will then make them eligible for Ph.D. candidacy.
4) In the fourth or following years, students will orally defend their dissertation.
Although the program is designed to admit students with B.A. or B.S. degree from an accredited higher education institution, some students might enter the program with a Master’s degree. These students will be required to complete the entire curriculum but may have certain elements in their program (e.g., a specific core course or first year Research Presentation) counted towards the degree requirements at the discretion of their Graduate Committee and the School’s Graduate Education Committee. The extent to which this will occur for a given student depends on the extent to which the requirements of the student’s previous degree coincide with the SPS Ph.D. program requirements (e.g., thesis/research requirements; coursework that articulates as SPS courses, etc.). Up to 15 credits of relevant coursework from another degree program can be applied to the Ph.D., with the approval of the committee.
Table 2: Approximate time line for completion of Psychology Ph.D. for students with Bachelor’s Degree
Activity / Year 1 / Year 2 / Year 3 / Year 4 / Year 5+Quantitative/Research Methods Core / X
First year Research Presentation / X
Program of Study Meeting / X
Professional Issues Core / X
Basic Content Core / X / X
Concentration Electives / X
Second year Project/Thesis Defense / X
Preliminary Exams / X
Dissertation Proposal / X
Dissertation Data Collection, Analysis, and Writing / X / X
Defense and Graduation / X / X
Table 3: Example of a Student's Path through the PhD Program for a student emphasizing Engineering Psychology (assumes GTA-related credit hour constraints).